When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Scatter plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scatter_plot

    A scatter plot, also called a scatterplot, scatter graph, scatter chart, scattergram, or scatter diagram, [2] is a type of plot or mathematical diagram using Cartesian coordinates to display values for typically two variables for a set of data. If the points are coded (color/shape/size), one additional variable can be displayed.

  3. Data and information visualization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_and_information...

    Scatter plots are often used to highlight the correlation between variables (x and y). Also called "dot plots" Scatter plot: Scatter plot (3D) position x; position y; position z; color; symbol; size; Similar to the 2-dimensional scatter plot above, the 3-dimensional scatter plot visualizes the relationship between typically 3 variables from a ...

  4. Misleading graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misleading_graph

    The usage of percentages as labels on a pie chart can be misleading when the sample size is small. [8] Making a pie chart 3D or adding a slant will make interpretation difficult due to distorted effect of perspective. [9] Bar-charted pie graphs in which the height of the slices is varied may confuse the reader. [9]

  5. gnuplot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnuplot

    gnuplot is a command-line and GUI program that can generate two- and three-dimensional plots of functions, data, and data fits.The program runs on all major computers and operating systems (Linux, Unix, Microsoft Windows, macOS, FreeDOS, and many others). [3]

  6. Multidimensional scaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multidimensional_scaling

    It is also known as Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCoA), Torgerson Scaling or Torgerson–Gower scaling. It takes an input matrix giving dissimilarities between pairs of items and outputs a coordinate matrix whose configuration minimizes a loss function called strain, [2] which is given by (,,...,) = (, (),) /, where denote vectors in N-dimensional space, denotes the scalar product between ...

  7. Wikipedia:SVG help - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:SVG_Help

    Scatter plots — Accepts up to five datasets. (updated 28 August 2023) Pie charts — Accepts a single dataset of up to 36 items. (updated 17 May 2023) Variable-width bar charts — Accepts up to six datasets; is like "Vertical bar charts", above, but user can choose different widths for different bars. (updated 27 August 2023)

  8. Volcano plot (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcano_plot_(statistics)

    A volcano plot is constructed by plotting the negative logarithm of the p value on the y axis (usually base 10). This results in data points with low p values (highly significant) appearing toward the top of the plot. The x axis is the logarithm of the fold change between the two conditions. The logarithm of the fold change is used so that ...

  9. Head/tail breaks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head/tail_breaks

    A good tool to display the scaling pattern, or the heavy-tailed distribution, is the rank-size plot, which is a scatter plot to display a set of values according to their ranks. With this tool, a new index [8] termed as the ratio of areas (RA) in a rank-size plot was defined to characterize the scaling pattern. The RA index has been ...